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IT'S TIME TO REINVENT THE GENERAL AVIATION AIRPLANE Robert Stengel Princeton University Current designs for general aviation airplanes have become obsolete, and avenues for major redesign must be considered. New designs should incorporate recent advances in electronics, aerodynamics, structures, materials, and propulsion. Future airplanes should be optimized to operate satisfactorily in a positive air traffic control environment, to afford safety and comfort for point-to-point transportation that is at least comparable to auto motive travel, and to take advantage of automated manufacturing techniques and high production rates. These requirements have broad implications for airplane design and flying qualities, leading to a concept for the Modern Equipment General A__.viation (ME(3A) airplane. Synergistic improvements in design, production, and operation can provide a much-needed "fresh start" for the general aviation industry and the traveling public. Achieving these goals requires nothing less than the reinvention of the small airplane, providing new opportunities and requirements for research. Although the term "general aviation" applies to a wide range of aircraft -- from single-engine, propeller-driven, single-seat planes to business jets -- the focus of this presentation is at the low end of the scale. Except as noted, a small four-place airplane is taken as a reference. Nevertheless, the proposed philosophy for new airplane design applies across the entire spectrum of general aviation. 81 IT'S TIME TO REINVENT THE GENERAL AVIATION AIRPLANE Declining Practical Importance of Small General Aviation Airplanes New Technologies .for Airplane Systems MEGA_PI_¢ Goals and Assumptions Characteristics of a 4-Place ME_3A-Plane Opportunities for Research 82 DECLINING PRACTICAL IMPORTANCE OF SMALL GENERAL AVIATION AIRPLANES For all practical purposes, the production of small general aviation (GA) airplanes in the United States has come to an end. The production rate for GA airplanes of all categories is about 1500 planes per year, less than 10 percent of what it was a decade ago. A thousand small GA airplanes were produced in 1986, but few of these were made by the manufacturers that formerly could be considered "The Big Three." Exports accounted for 30% of the US production; in the coming year, the General Aviation Manufacturers Association expects a comparable percentage of foreign imports, with a large concentration in the single-engine category. The average age of US small airplanes is 20 years old. The production of GA airplanes currently has minimal impact on the domestic economy. Although general aviation is said to be a $15 billion, business, only $200 million of that can be attributed to the sale of small airplanes. As fixed-base-operator income decreases, the idea of converting airfield real estate to condominiums and shopping centers becomes attractive, driving many small airports near major urban areas out of business. Small airports are losing the business of serious travelers, and an increasing number principally serve weekend pilots and flight schools. This trend is particularly detrimental to the national transportation system in view of the heavy congestion at most major airports, and it accelerates the decline in travel by GA airplane. An ancillary point is that recent growth in commercial air travel has created a shortage of airline pilots. General aviation has long been a spawn- ing ground for airline pilots, but it is not producing enough well-qualified pilots to meet the demand. One consequence is that relatively low-time pilots are flying in the right seats of many commercial aircraft cockpits. Although important research continues in applicable technology areas such as stall/spin dynamics and aerodynamic flow control, neither the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) nor the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) currently supports substantial research and develop- ment specifically directed at general aviation. If GA airplanes are no longer produced in the US or if GA flying must be perceived as the domain of the hobbyist and the well-to-do alone, it will be increasingly difficult to justify the expenditure of federal funds for its enhancement. 83 DECLINING PRACTICAL IMPORTANCE OF SMALL GENERAL AVIATION AIRPLANES Large-Scale Production of Small Airplanes has Ended GA Production Rates are Less Than 10% of What They Were a Decade Ago ( about 1500 planes/yr) Small Airplanes Production is Less Than a Thousand per Year Three Major GA Manufacturers Currently Produce Few Small Airplanes Small Airports are Closing Neither FAA nor NASA has Any Substantial GA R&D Initiatives 84 REASONS FOR THE DECLINE There are many reasons for the decline in production of small airplanes. While numerous evolutionary changes have been incorporated in GA airplanes, most examples trace their basic designs to the late 1940s, with technologies established a decade or more earlier. Manufacturers find certification costs higher than ever before, and production costs are in an unstable spiral as the number of produced aircraft decreases. Except in special cases, there is a large disparity between the cost of owning and using a GA airplane and the cost of traveling by competing modes. The GA airplane may well be cost-effective in a small-business setting, particularly where a large area must be covered quickly on a regular basis; lacking a business subsidy, few middle-income travelers consider GA transportation affordable. GA manutacturers are being found liable for an increasing number of airplane accidents, and the cost of liability insurance or "self-insurance" has become a significant percentage of the total cost of each new airplane. This is a disincentive not only to the airplane producer but to the potential owner, who must pay the added costs. While gains have been made, the accident rate for GA aircraft still is substantially higher than that for competing modes. The hazard is comparable to motorcycle riding and somewhat greater than traveling by commercial aircraft, train, or automobile. Air traffic control procedures have become more complex with airline deregulation and increasing commercial air travel, and future GA travel is likely to be limited even more in view of productivity and fuel-use considerations. Flying an airplane in poor weather conditions demands a high level of IFR proficiency, something that relatively few GA pilots can achieve and maintain. Finally, there is real confusion about the goals of general aviation. Should it be considered as a candidate mode for transporting large numbers of people? Should travel by small airplane be more like sailing to Bermuda or driving to Pittsburgh? Can general aviation have a major impact on the economy? Should particular classes of general aviation (e.g., air taxis and corporate aircraft vs. personally owned small planes) be singled out for special treatment? Without answers to these and similar questions, general aviation will decline even further. 85 REASONS FOR THE DECLINE Slow Incorporation of New Technologies High Costs of Certification, Production, and Operation High Costs of Liability High Accident Rates in Comparison to Other Modes of Transportation Increasingly Complex Air Traffic Control Regulations High Level of Piloting Proficiency Required for All-Weather Flying Confusion About GA Goals 86 NEED FOR A RESURGENT GENERAL AVIATION INDUSTRY General aviation provides unique capabilities for rapid point- to-point travel for small groups of people. It is complementary to the hub-t0-hub and hub-spoke services of the major and feeder airlines. With area navigation and sufficient satellite airports, general aviation airplanes can be routed through under-utilized airspace, avoiding areas of congestion both in the air and on the ground. By diverting significant numbers of travelers from the public carriers, general aviation could actually reduce congestion in the terminal area. Just as automobile travel between two suburbs often is quicker, cheaper, and more efficient than public ground transportation into and out of a neighboring metropolis, general aviation offers a potentially attractive alternative for many trips between points not near large airports. Improving reliability and safety are continuing issues in all modes of transportation. No matter what the current level, we always seek to lower the costs of operation, to simplify maintenance, to facilitate on-time performance, and to reduce the risks inherent in travel. In order for new GA airplanes to attract potential buyers, they must provide benefits in comparison to the competition -- used airplanes or new planes produced by other (possibly foreign) manufacturers. The production of small airplanes could be a multi-billion- dollar business. The two most likely outcomes of not rebuilding the GA industry will be the de facto encouragement of foreign airframe and engine manufacturers to introduce their products to the US market and the loss of additional foreign markets for American products. Yet another business will be converted from a manufactt_ ring to a service industry, with its attendant diminution of technical leadership and long-term economic security. There is an opportunity -- if not an imperative -- to ask the question, "If we were unfettered by the need to adapt new technologies to old designs in piecemeal fashion, how would we design small airplanes?" Or put another way, "Hgw wqold we invent the GA airplane to satisfy the needs of potential users while accounting for the realities of the
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